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Tuesday, 4 April 2017

A belated bye-bye to Blue Ribbon Tea (1897 - 2015)

October 25, 1914, Winnipeg Tribune

Here's a slightly out-of-date news update: Unilever Canada discontinued the production of Blue Ribbon Tea back in 2015.

The company confirmed this in a response to my e-mail inquiry. It said there are many reasons why a product is dropped and that, "Consumer demand is a major factor. If the level of demand is insufficient to ensure that consumers receive high quality products at an affordable price, the product will likely be discontinued."

With that, a product with that originated in Winnipeg 120 years ago, quietly disappeared from the retail landscape.


The Blue Ribbon Manufacturing Company was created in the late 1890s by the J. and G. F. Galt Company.

John Galt and his cousin George F. Galt, (also see), were both from well-to-do Ontario families and came to Winnipeg in 1882 to set up a grocery wholesale business on Ross Avenue. Their trade boomed along with the city's economy and in 1887 they had a large factory and warehouse built on Princess Street.

November 22, 1897, Winnipeg Tribune

In 1897, the Galts created a subsidiary called the Blue Ribbon Manufacturing Company at 333 Elgin Avenue. They hired John Dingle Roberts from their major competitor, Pure Gold Manufacturing of Toronto, to run the factory. Customers got a preview of their products at their booth at the Winnipeg Industrial Exhibition that summer when they offered free tea to all.

By November, Blue Ribbon's plant was producing the household basics of coffee, tea, baking powder and packaged spices. More than just a re-packager, they roasted their own coffee, blended their own tea and ground their own spices at the Winnipeg plant.

Thanks to the reach of the Galt's existing grocery wholesale network, the Bue Ribbon brand instantly had distribution through Western Canada.

Business was so good that a larger premises was built for the Blue Ribbon at company at 87 King Street in 1901.

https://www.abebooks.com/book-search/title/blue-ribbon-cook/pics/
Top: Western Home Monthly, July 1923 (Peel's)
Bottom: The 19th edition, 1949, (AbeBooks)

The company published the first Blue Ribbon Cook Book, "Prepared especially for everyday use in Western homes" in 1905. It cost 25 cents, it was packed full of recipes, including a section for bachelor cooking, and handy household tips. It became a staple in many Canadian homes.

At least nineteen editions of the cook book were printed into the late 1940s, though later versions swapped "Western" for "Canadian" in the subtitle.

http://searcharchives.vancouver.ca/g-f-and-j-galt-display-of-blue-ribbon-tea-and-coffee
Booth at 1927 Pacific National Exhibition (Vancouver Archives)

The company underwent a number of corporate changes through the decades.

In 1907, it took on more investors and became Blue Ribbon Company Limited. Three years later, the Galts merged their Galt Company in with Blue Ribbon and left the grocery wholesale business behind in favour of manufacturing.

In 1930, two years after the death of George and three years before the death of John, control of the company was sold to Blue Ribbon Corporation Ltd..

By World War II, Blue Ribbon had built a second plant in Vancouver and bought out Toronto-based competitor Pure Gold Manufacturing. The Blue Ribbon brand was marketed in the West and Pure Gold was used in the East.

October 15, 1959, Winnipeg Free Press

On October 31, 1959, Blue Ribbon was purchased by Brooke Bond Canada Ltd., a subsidiary of the U.K.-based tea and spice company. The manufacturing plant stayed in Winnipeg but the head office moved to Montreal.

Blue Ribbon's tea, coffee, and baking soda carried on under the new company, though, it seems, the spice division was either discontinued or absorbed under the existing Brooke Bond Spices trade name.

December 3, 1960, Winnipeg Tribune

Brooke Bond had another tea in their product line-up called Red Rose that was manufactured in Eastern Canada. The two teas continued under their own names and often shared Brooke Bond marketing schemes, such as their collectors cards series.

The card idea originated with Brooke Bond's U.K. teas in 1954. The plastic cards, seventeen different series produced for Canadian products between about 1959 and 1974, came free inside boxes of Red Rose or Blue Ribbon tea. Topics included Songbirds of North America, animals, baseball players and the Future of Transportation. In 1954, Blue Ribbon offered a a series on CFL players.

https://www.unilever.ca/about/

British-Dutch company Unilever acquired Brooke Bond in 1984 for £389 million in a hostile takeover. The conglomerate, which by this time owned Lipton's, was primarily interested in Brooke Bond's hefty share of the British tea market. 

Soon after the takeover, manufacturing plants in places like Saint John, NB and Winnipeg were closed. (If you know more about when exactly the Winnipeg plant closed, please let me know below!)

With this and subsequent takeovers of competitors, Unilever had about a dozen brands of tea in its product line. Some, like PG Tips and Lipton, were known to large sections of the globe while others were regional brands specific to India, Australia and Canada.


The Blue Ribbon family of products products such as tea, coffee and baking powder, were advertised in newspaper grocery ads in to the 2010s. The last mention found of them comes in December 2014. Today, no "Blue Ribbon" branded products are listed on the company's Canadian website, though Unilever still holds the copyright to the name and various logos.

Unilever confirmed that the tea was discontinued in 2015. A follow-up email about when Blue Ribbon coffee and baking powder was discontinued was not responded to.


More ads:

"Mmmm... lead lined packets!" June 13, 1906, Winnipeg Free Press

Blue Ribbon ad, 1958, Winnipeg Tribune

Blue Ribbon ad, ca. 1930s (Calgary)

Blue Ribbon ad, June 3, 1904, The Voice (Winnipeg)

22 comments:

Bob Andrews said...

Thanks for the info on Blue Ribbon , I am in Ontario and I collect Blue Ribbon items and I was not aware of the later blue foil sealed coffee bags. The one item I am really looking for is an original tin foil and paper tea packet similar to the ad on your page from 1914 Winnipeg Tribune. Nice to see all that information .

Anonymous said...

Now I will stop looking for blue ribbon tea bags. Glad I went online. Thanks for the update.

Jenn said...

I'm looking for the ingredients that were in the Blue Ribbon Pickling spices. It was packaged in a small box.

Janice W said...

Thank you for sharing this info. I have for years drank Blue Ribbon tea but I am not often a tea drinker. Tried to find some to purchase today and saw your article. Also disappointed to hear of the demise of Blue Ribbon baking powder.

NicMck said...

Thanks so much for this informative post! My great grandparents homesteads in Saskatchewan in 1903. Today my 89 year old father had a sudden memory of his grandma drinking Blue Ribbon tea. Thank you for the info and advertisements that gave context to his memory! Great post!

Unknown said...

Interesting! I have the four Loopin and Jaggers books by Loretta Moore, copywriter 1945 “To receive them just save Blue Ribbon coupons found in Blue Ribbon Tea, Coffee, baking powder, cocoa and Bsking Chocolate.” Is what it says on the back of the booklets.

Unknown said...

Do you have the 4 Loopin and Jaggers booklets published in 1945? A person could get them by sending in Blue Ribbon coupons from their products.

Anonymous said...

I have a binder full of old Blue Ribbon systematic saving certificates, are they worth anything?

Unknown said...

I just bought blue ribbon bakibg powder 2 weeks ago. Edmonton Ab. Can.

Unknown said...

We found an old blue ribbon cook book when we cleaned out may grandma's house. Only date in it us 1905. Not sure if your interested

Unknown said...

Been looking for blue ribbon baking powderin saskatoon sk, where can i find some?

ChristineVFR said...

hello anyone out here or the author of this piece ,know what currently sold brand would be comparable in taste to the old Blue Ribbon Tea?? would the Red Rose Cdn Breakfast tea or the Otange Pekoe work? thanks!! I have a senior who is asking repeatedly for specifically Blue Ribbon Tea and knows none of what I am giving her is it. She has dementia but is on point for other things at times. thanx in advance!!

Doug said...

I found a big bag of tea sealed up in a 5 gallon pail in my basement. I had had plans to move out to the country, so I had put away some camping food items away in pails for easy storage/transport. I’m not sure if I should just enjoy the last of a good thing, or sell it off in small zip lock bags. Any interested parties?

Anonymous said...

yes

jo-ann said...

I lived in Winnipeg for awhile close to Blue Ribbon. The teacher of the school I went to in Gr 6( Victoria Albert ) gave us a project to go out and visit businesses and collect information. I went to Blue Ribbon and explained why I was there and they gave me sample packets of all they made. It was so awesome and my mom enjoyed the samples. I can still hear the jingle of Blue Ribbon: " I love coffee, I love tea, Blue Ribbon is the taste for me. "

Anonymous said...

Where can I buy Blue Ribbon Tea in Manitoba?

Anonymous said...

Where can I buy blue ribbon baking powder in Saskatchewan. It is the only baking powder that makes good baking powder biscuits, and I have tried many but no luck!!

Anonymous said...

Yes please

Anonymous said...

Yes please

J. Wizzy said...

Does anyone remember buying Blue Ribbon Milk Chocolate candy bars in about 1954?

Bill Kee said...

I like coffee
I like tea
Blue ribbon is the drink for me

Anonymous said...

I used to buy Blue Ribbon loose tea leaves starting in the 70s. I stopped when so many other brands started to enter the market. I wonder when the loose leaf tea was discontinued.